Pennington v. People's Bank of Sumner

95 So. 694, 132 Miss. 23
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1923
DocketNo. 22823
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 95 So. 694 (Pennington v. People's Bank of Sumner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennington v. People's Bank of Sumner, 95 So. 694, 132 Miss. 23 (Mich. 1923).

Opinions

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 26th day of October, 1015, H. R. Jenkins and his wife, Elizabeth Jenkins, conveyed to the appellant, Ben T. Pennington, certain lands in Tallahatchie county involved in this litigation for the consideration of one thousand dollars cash in hand paid, receipt of which was acknowledged, and the further consideration of the assumption of all of the obligations and indebtedness of the said H. R. or Elizabeth Jenkins which is secured by a lieu on the property therein conveyed, which indebtedness the appellant, Pennington,' agreed and promised to pay as part of the consideration for said deed.

About the year 1918 H. R. and Elizabeth Jenkins filed their bill in the chancery court alleging that the said deed was in fact a mortgage and that they had remained in the possession of the property, and prayed for an accounting of the amount due Pennington and for a redemption of the mortgage. Jenkins and his wife, Elizabeth, employed [25]*25attorneys to represent them in said snit, and the cause came to issue, and there was an agreement to settle the litigation by having the title confirmed to Pennington by decree of the said court, which decree was entered by consent and Pennington was to and did convey to J. W. Cutrer and A. H. Stephens, attorneys for H. R. and Elizabeth Jenkins, the property in question at and for the sum of forty-five thousand dollars; of which seventeen thousand five hundred dollars was paid by check of the said attorneys to Pennington and afterwards duly paid; and by the giving of their note to Pennington for twenty-seven thousand five hundred dollars, reserving a. vendor’s lien in the deed and note to secure the payment of said note. The consent decree and this note and deed were all signed and delivered on the 10th day of November, 1919. On or about the 15th day of November, 1919, a meeting was held and arrangements perfected by which the said attorneys for H. R. and Elizabeth Jenkins were repaid the check for seventeen thousand five hundred dollars, and their note for twenty-seven thousand five hundred dollars surrendered back to them and deed made by them to said H. R. Jenkins to the said property and deed of trust given to Pennington by H. R. and Elizabeth Jenkins on the said lands for the sum of forty-five thousand dollars. There was also an arrangement by’ which H. R. and Elizabeth Jenkins secured from the People’s Bank of Sumner a loan of twenty thousand dollars evidenced by two promissory notes, one for ten thousand dollars due and payable to the People’s Bank of Sumner one year after date, and one for ten thousand dollars due and payable to the People’s Bank of Sumner two years after date; said notes to the said People’s Bank were secured by deed of trust on the lands in controversy, and also by certain other lands belonging to J. W. Jenkins and G. C. Jenkins on their individual lands, said individual lands constituting two hundred fifty five acres, and said notes to the bank were signed by H. R. Jenkins and his wife, Elizabeth Jenkins, and by J. W. Jenkins- and G. 0. Jenkins. These instruments were all [26]*26dated on the 15th day of November, 1919, and the acknowledgments of H. R. Jenkins and his wife, Elizabeth Jenkins, were taken on the 18th day of November, 1919, and the acknowledgments of J. W. Jenkins and of G. C. Jenkins were taken on the 19th day of November, 1919; and the deeds of trust filed for record on the 20th day of November, 1919. .There was also a deed of trust from, H. R. Jenkins and Elizabeth Jenkins to J. W. Jenkins and G. C. Jenkins on the property in controversy to secure them from loss by their indorsements of the notes of H. R. Jenkins and Elizabeth Jenkins to the People’s Bank of Sumner.

The meetings and negotiations as above stated were- had on the night of the 15th of November, 1919, partly in the office of A. H. Stephens .and partly in the People’s Bank of Sumner. Mr. Ben T. Rowland, Jr., the cashier of the People’s Bank, was present representing the bank, and agreed to have all the papers above mentioned drawn up without expense to the other parties, and all the pallies left the papers to be prepared by Rowland; Pennington, the appellant, giving his check for the seventeen thousand five hundred dollars to be paid when the check of Outrer was paid and when the papers were prepared in accordance with the agreement. The note of Outrer and Stephens for twenty-seven thousand five hundred dollars was to be redelivered to them. The deeds of trust were filed for record in the following order: First, the deed of trust to Pennington at 10:30 a. m. on November 20, 1919; the deed of trust to the People’s Bank at 11:30 a. m. on the same day; and the deed of trust to J. W. Jenkins and G. O. Jenkins a,t 12:30 p. m. on the same day.

About one year after these papers were taken and recorded, Ben T. Rowland, Jr., having then recently died, the president of the People’s Bank of Sumner, Mr. T. 0. Buford, in checking np the affairs of the bank and checking np the records, found that Pennington’s deed of trust was recorded prior in time to that of the bank and that the records showed that it matured on January 1, 1921. [27]*27He then went to the bank and went into the private papers of Mr. Pennington, which were in a box or drawer which the bank had for the use of its customers, and found the Pennington deed of trust and note, and on inspection it appeared on the original paper as originally written on the typewriter that the deed of trust was due on January 1, 1926, and that the “6” had been partially erased and the figure “1” written instead. He thereupon sent for Mr. Pennington and called his attention to this fact and asked him if he had an attorney. Mr. Pennington replied that Mr. Cook represented him, and Mr. Cook was sent for, and Mr. Buford turned over to Mr. Pennington the said papers. Mr. Buford testified that Mr. Pennington made no explanation of the matter, but said he would stand upon the papers. Mr. Buford consulted with the Jenkinses about the matter, and they represented that Mr. Pennington’s note and deed of trust did not mature on January 1, 1921, and also that Mr. Pennington was to be second or subordinate to the deed of trust and notes of the bank and also to that of J. W. Jenkins and G. C. Jenkins. Mr. Pennington asked Mr. Buford about paying the interest on the H. R. Jenkins note to him, it being then due and unpaid. Mr. Buford refused for two reasons: First, he did not think Mr. Jenkins would be willing to pay the interest when the note and deed of trust showed maturity on January 1, 1921, when they would be subject to foreclosure of such deed of trust at any time; and, second, that he had no authority to pay such interest, but proposed to lend Mr. Pennington one thousand dollars on a demand note, which arrangement was carried out.

Whereupon the People’s Bank of Sumner and J. W. Jenkins and G. C. Jenkins filed a bill setting forth that the bank’s deed of trust was a prior deed of trust to the other two deeds of trust, and that the deed of trust of J. W. Jenkins and G. C. Jenkins was a second deed of trust, and that Pennington’s deed of trust was a third deed of trust; and also setting up that the date of the maturity of the note and deed of trust to Pennington had been ma[28]*28terially and fraudulently altered and that it was void, and charging that Pennington was claiming and asserting a prior right to enforce his deed of trust against the property involved, and alleging that they were entitled to have said deed of trust to. Pennington canceled aand removed as a cloud upon their respective rights.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People's Bank in Liquidation v. Pennington
102 So. 386 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 So. 694, 132 Miss. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennington-v-peoples-bank-of-sumner-miss-1923.